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ARTnews on MSNAustralian Politicians Protest UNESCO Concerns over Ancient Rock Art Near Gas ProjectHigh-ranking politicians in Australia are pushing back against UNESCO's concerns that ancient rock art in Western Australia ...
1don MSN
After UNESCO expressed concern that the extension of Woodside's North West Shelf gas facility would cause nearby Murujuga ...
The chairman of a major Aboriginal corporation has lashed environmentalists for undermining a bid to recognise ancient rock ...
The gas giant’s controversial project faces another hurdle as environmental activists launch an 11th-hour bid to overturn a ...
The UN is proposing to knock back Australia's bid to add the Murujuga Cultural Area to the World Heritage list, instead asking the federal government to address concerns about emissions degrading the ...
Mardathoonera woman Raelene Cooper's challenge to Federal Environment Minister Murray Watt will be heard in the Federal Court ...
Smith told CNN in 2022 that sulfur and nitrogen oxides emitted from the industrial plants on Murujuga were mixing with moisture in the air to form acid rain that was damaging the rocks ...
The Federal Government's decision to extend the licence of Woodside Energy’s North West Shelf LNG plant has raised great concerns around the fate of 50,000-year-old Aboriginal rock art located in the ...
Murujuga, the world’s largest rock-art site, might not meet UNESCO World Heritage List requirements due to local fossil fuel plant emissions.
Last week, the Australian government announced it had given preliminary approval for the country’s biggest fossil fuel project, the North West Shelf Project, to continue operations until 2070. The ...
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